23.3.11

Wren churches in the City of London


After I moved to London a couple of years ago, my father sent me a slim 20-page booklet measuring 4 X 7 inches titled "The Architecture of Christopher Wren in and near London".

My father paid sixpence for the booklet, published by London Transport in 1957, when he lived in London.  Printed on its cover in both Latin and English is the slogan: "Make the most of your public transport".

Of 13 city churches listed as the "most complete and rewarding" in the booklet, I have seen six. Of 17 city churches listed as "remnants" because they still suffered from World War Two bombing damage, I have seen 5, all of which are now restored.

Wren, born in 1632, supervised the restoration of St Paul's  Cathedral, which began in 1675 -- almost 10 years after the Great Fire of London in 1666 -- and was completed 35 years later

My father wrote many notes in the margins of the booklet. He often mentions how much time he spent in London visiting the various Wren churches. I am not sure if he was interested in churches partly because his father was a Baptist minister, or if it was because the churches are fascinating for their architectural variety and their window into the past.

He moved to London from Toronto in the 1950s. He worked at Whiteley's department store in Bayswater at first, and then at Westminster Press and Reuters on Fleet Street. He met my mother in Bayswater and they were wed in her village Grayshott on the Surrey-Hampshire border.

Yesterday, I visited St Stephen Walbrook Church near Bank, which has a prototype dome for St Paul's Cathedral, and is the first classical dome to be built in England. The Samaritans charity group -- precursor to the telephone helpline -- was founded there in 1953.

St Stephen Walbrook was restored after World War Two, and British sculptor Henry Moore commissioned to design an altar in 1972, made of travertine marble from the quarry Italian sculptor Michelangelo used for his work.

I also went to St Michael Paternoster Royal, which was rebuilt and enlarged by Dick Whittington, who as lord mayor lived next door, in 1409. It was destroyed in the Great Fire of 1966 and rebuilt by Wren, then it was destroyed by a flying bomb in 1944 and restored in 1966-68. It features a stained glass window of Whittington and his cat.

Whittington was an orphan who moved to London to seek his fortune.  Whittington found employment as a scullery boy. Unfortunately, Dick's little room was infested with rats. Dick earned a penny shining a gentleman's shoes, and with it he bought a cat, who drove off the rats.

One day, Mr. Fitzwarren asked his servants if they wished to send something in his ship, leaving on a journey to a far off port, to trade for gold. Reluctantly, Dick sent his cat. Dick was happy living with Mr. Fitzwarren, except that Fitzwarren's cook was cruel to Dick, who eventually decided to run away. But before he could leave the city, he heard the Bow Bells ring out. They seemed to be saying, "Turn again Whittington, thrice Lord Mayor of London". Dick retraced his steps and found that Mr. Fitzwarren's ship had returned. His cat had been sold for a great fortune to the King of Barbary, whose palace was overrun with mice. Dick was a rich man. He joined Mr. Fitzwarren in his business and married his daughter Alice, and in time became the Lord Mayor of London three times, just as the bells had predicted.

I next went to St mary Aldermary church which has a stained glass window featuring a kneeling Wren and then Mary le Bow Church, considered the Cockneys' church because those born within range of the sound of the bells are said to be cockneys are said to be born.

I then went to St Vedast, where I owe a pound for purchasing a booklet without enough change.
I tried to visit St Bartholomew the Great in West Smithfield and St James Garlickhythe, but they were shut.

23/03/2011

13.3.11

From Tibetan turmoil to tepid Toronto


I originally completed this profile piece in spring 2003, while attending the Ryerson University School of Journalism in Toronto.  At the time, I didn't try and get it published anywhere. A recent story that the Dalai Lama intends to quit his role as political leader of Tibet made me recall it and decide to post it.

It is a mid-November evening, and Toronto is in the grip of a cold snap. Inside the Riwoche Tibetan Buddhist Temple, where incense and blazing lights warm the air, the chill of the outside world is forgotten.

The temple's leader and founder, Lama Khenpo Sonam Tobgyal Rinpoche, is wrapped in a burgundy-coloured robe, his feet clad in thin grey cotton socks. He sits cross-legged on an elevated platform overlooking his congregation. He and several rows of followers, mostly with serious faces chant the medicine Buddha mantra in unison, their bodies rocking gently to its rhythm.

The Tantric incantation has a dual purpose. It is intended both to promote self healing and to energize those suffering from physical or mental illness. The process of chanting a series of syllables and identifying with a meditational deity allows Buddhists to pierce through the world of illusion (the everyday world) and express pure tones of enlightenment.

On this evening, before the chanting begins, a long list of names is read aloud. It includes the Pope (John Paul II) and the victims of the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks on the United States.

The peaceful atmosphere of the shrine, which is housed in a piano factory once operated by the now defunct, formerly world famous, Heintzman & Company Ltd., is enhanced by the beauty and symmetry of its decorative interior design.

A pantheon of life-size, golden-skinned Buddhist deities, made of clay and painted by Bhutanese sculptor Tshewang Dorje, are arranged on an altar at the end of the room.

Stylized three-dimensional clouds jut out from the blue mural, which is a backdrop for the sculptures. Each cloud supports a small, one-foot high sculpture. A row of small silver bowls, symbolizing the Buddha and his teachings, sit along the edge of the altar. The other three walls of the shrine are decorated with a series of hand-painted wall hangings known as thangkas.

If the 62-year-old Sonam is embittered by his past, it is not evident in his demeanor tonight. Sonam fled his hometown temple in eastern Tibet as a young man. He was driven out after the Chinese People's Liberation Army suppressed the 1959 Tibetan uprising against the government of China. It was the beginning of a long journey for Sonam, who founded the Riwoche Tibetan Buddhist Temple in Toronto's Junction neighbourhood in 1990.

"I still don't fully comprehend how I survived," he says. "I'm still thinking about it. I'm stunned."

The end of the medicine Buddha meditation is signalled by Sonam striking two small brass cymbals together three times. After the medicine Buddha meditation on Tuesdays Sonam provides consultations -- subject to the availability of his translator -- and I have arranged to meet him on this particular evening. Sonam stands and smiles as I approach. He extends his hand to shake mine.

After we greet each other, I sit on the floor looking up at Sonam and his translator, Shakya Dorje. Sonam sits on an elevated platform about four feet above the floor. Dorje sits on a two-foot high platform next to Sonam's. We begin our discussion.

TIBETAN BEGINNINGS

Sonam grew up in a middle-class home near the town of Riwoche (also spelled Riwoqe), which is about 550 kilometres east of Lhasa. He was born in 1940. It is common to live with extended family members in Tibet, and Sonam lived not only with his parents, but with about 15 relatives, including paternal and maternal aunts and uncles.

Tibet's economy was based primarily on agriculture when the Chinese gained control of Tibet seven months after they invaded in October 1950. Sonam's family included both farmers and herding people.

"These occupations are separate in Tibet,"he explains. "So the farming part of our family planted the fields, and the herding part of our family took the herds out to the pastures, where they take the animals by rotation over a cycle of a year." His family owned goats, horses, mules, sheep and yak.

As a child, Sonam was sent to the temple in Riwoche -- about 15 kilometres from home -- to study to become a lama. His family members were devout buddhists. He says it was their collective wish that he become a religious leader. He received his designation as a lama when he was 17 years old. The process of becoming a lama is a combination of both study and practice.

It wasn't until he was a refugee in India, where he continued his spiritual practices and studies, that Sonam took up his position as teaching lama. "Receiving your designation as a lama and taking up your position as a teaching lama are two different things," he says. "Being a lama requires development of certain spiritual qualities to be really seen as a teaching lama. so I did not take up a vocation, although I had the designation, but I did not take up the vocation of a teaching lama in Tibet."

Under a Tibetan-Chinese agreement signed in May 1951, the two-year-old People's Republic of China had pronounced Tibet a national autonomous region. The formerly independent country was placed under the traditional rule of the Dalai Lama. However, after the agreement was signed many thought Tibet was controlled only by the whims of the Chinese government.

Dalai Lamas are believed to be human manifestations, or reincarnations, of the deity Avalokiteshvara. As protector of the world, Avalokiteshvara is believed to save living beings from suffering. He is a bodhisattva, one of a series of deities believed by Tibetan Buddhists to delay enlightenment to help others reach nirvana. Between 1642 and 1959, 14 different Dalai Lamas have ruled Tibet in succession. The 14th Dalai Lama lives in Dharamsala in northern India. Dalai Lama is an honorific title meaning "ocean of wisdom".

1959 REVOLT

In 1956, the Preparatory Committee for the Autonomous Region of Tibet was formed.  It too was nominally headed by the Dalai Lama, but apparently controlled by the Communists. Land reforms and the collectivization of monasteries led to uprisings that became a full-scale revolt in March 1959. The Communists, adhering to the Marxist edict that religion is the opium of the people, instituted re-education programs for lamas.

According to Sonam, the lamas of the 13th-century Riwoche Temple -- known as Riwoche Tsuglhakhang in Tibet -- were arrested and imprisoned. The common monks and administrators were told to return to their villages to take up work as agricultural labourers. Amidst the general mayhem of the revolt, the temple was ransacked.  The monasteries maintained stores of food that were seized by the army. All religious rituals were banned.

Sonam says there was a great deal of looting; horses were seized. And, he says, although the weapons owned by the lamas and local people were simple -- typically muzzleloaders or short swords -- they were confiscated. There was some redistribution of wealth, but according to Sonam, the Communists seized a large part of it.

"The wealthier people were put into prison and they found some poor people to set up as puppets," he says. "My father was a kind of mayor, and his office was ransacked."

"Whatever was happening was happening under forced military orders. If anyone disagreed, they were shot."

ESCAPE FROM TIBET 

Sonam says he didn't wait around to discover the nature of his own fate. "I ran away -- fled -- but if I had stayed, I would have been put in prison becaus I was on a list of lamas of the temple," he says. "I did not have a moment to return home. I fled the temple to the forest."

He and five monks headed south on foot towards Pemako, a region about 450 kilometres east of Lhasa. It is south of a town called Bomi (also called Bowo) on the Indian border, and is thought to be a sacred, protective place. In times of danger, it is used as a retreat.

When the men reached the Himalayan pass leading to Pemako, it was heavily snowed in. The snow in the pass melts only at the height of summer and so they decided to wait until the pass opened. After waiting two months, they were attacked by the PLA and arrested. Sonam says that a major Chinese battalion of around 100,000 soldiers moved in and scoured the region for people who were not local residents. Sonam was transported to Lhasa and imprisoned for six months, where he was subjected to a re-education program and forced labour.

"We weren't starved in my time in prison," he says. "The food was awful and you weren't really full, but at least you weren't completely hungry."

There was no incentive to willingly become a Communist in the prison. "There was no encouragement to become a Communist, it was obligatory," Sonam explains. "There was no other choice except to do that, so it wasn't something they felt they had to encourage, because it was obligatory. If you declared that you did not believe in Communism, you were put into a circle with everyone else and you were beaten."

When he was released from prison, he was given a choice of returning to Riwoche or staying in Lhasa. "I told them I would choose to return to Riwoche, because there were hundreds of thousands of soldiers in Lhasa and I clearly wasn't going to get away if I chose to stay in Lhasa. So I chose to go to Riwoche, thus getting a little more chance to flee."

He left the road en route to Riwoche and fled toward the pass to India again. This time he was successful in crossing into India, although it took a year. He travelled on foot because there was no path wide enough to accommodate a horse or a yak. "I flew through the sky as much as I could," he said laughingly.

REFUGEE CAMP IN INDIA

He sometimes found people who fed him. At times, he went for days with only water to drink. He emerged in the Indian state of Assam in 1961 and entered a refugee camp. "We were very well received by the Indians when I crossed the border," Sonam says. "And I and other refugees were transported by air -- about a one-hour flight -- to a remote area in India."

According to Sonam, many people died in the camp because Tibetans couldn't tolerate the hot climate. The Indian government moved people to different areas where they could adapt better. He was moved to a cooler camp near the Darjiling-Kalimpang region in West Bengal, about 825 kilometres east of New Delhi. The region is between Bhutan and Nepal.

Between 1961 and 1988, he moved among Darjiling, Bhutan and Nepal.

RELOCATION TO CANADA

In 1988, he was asked to take up a posting at a Buddhist programe in Whitehorse, and the following year he moved to Toronto.

Out of an estimated 100,000 people who have left Tibet since 1959, about 600 live in Canada.

Sonam is comfortable living in Toronto, although it is very different from Asia. "I find it quite pleasant to be living here doing what I do," he says. "It is quite a different place, but it is my karma, my destiny, to be here. When I was first here, I found it more difficult, because I didn't speak any English. I still don't speak English that well, but I have a translator here that I have known for a long time, so I can do almost anything I have to do, so thus it has become quite a good place for me to live."

Perhaps it is also karma that drew him to the old Heintzman piano factory. The late founder of the infamous piano factory was also a refugee from political turmoil in his homeland. Unsettled by the European revolutions of 1848, more than a century before Sonam arrived in Canada, Theodore August Heintzman (1817-1899) fled Berlin for the United States.

He immigrated to Toronto by 1866 and founded the company that would establish Canada's reputation as a first-class piano producer. Heintzman pianos were made by the company for more than 100 years until it merged with the Sherlock-Manning Piano Company in 1978.